Uses “I” (and sometimes “we” if placing themself as part of a group)
What is First Person?
"Her eyes were diamonds." What is this literary term?
What is Metaphor?
The English version of hypothesis.
What is Inference?
The climate or feeling of a literary work.
What is Mood?
A work that makes fun of another work by imitating some aspect of the original piece’s style.
What is Parody?
An insight about human life that's revealed in a literary work.
What is Theme?
What is Rhetoric?
"Her eyes were as bright as diamonds." What literary device is this?
What is Simile?
The time and place of a story.
What is setting?
Giving an animal or inanimate object human traits.
What is Personification?
Credible sources
What is Ethos?
Touching reader’s emotions
What is Pathos?
Using logical facts
What is Logos?
The writer’s attitude toward the character, subject, and audience of a story.
What is Tone?
The example "middle school girls" was used for what literary term?
What is Hyperbole?
There are ___ types of irony.
What is Three?
Statements that imply a meaning in opposition to their literal meaning.
What is Verbal Irony?
A formal word to replace "discussion" in literature.
What is Dialogue?
A particular way of speaking that is unique to social class or region.
What is Dialect?
A work that ridicules the shortcomings of specific people or institutions as an attempt to bring about change.
What is Satire?
Narrator tells the events of the story without knowing any motivations, thoughts, or feelings of the characters.
What is Third-Person Objective?
All knowing; knows ALL characters thoughts and feelings. On the outside looking in.
What is Third-Person Omniscient?
Narrator tells the story from a single character’s perspective. Refers to them by name or they/she/he. Can read their thoughts, but only that one characters.
What is Third-Person Limited?
The words a writer chooses.
What is Diction?
This term's purpose is to make an audible pulse to give a piece of writing a lyrical effect.